What quantities are conserved in chemical reactions? grams and atoms.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
TIER 6 Combine the knowledge of gases and solutions to perform stoichiometric calculations.
Advertisements

Stoichiometry Jeopardy
Chapter 11 “Stoichiometry”
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry.
Stoichiometry Chapter 12.
Stoichiometry Chapter 12.
Chapter 9 Combining Reactions and Mole Calculations.
Chapter 9 Combining Reactions and Mole Calculations.
New Section in Table of Contents
AP Chemistry Chap. 3 Stoichiometry, Part Chemical Equations (p. 100)- shows a chemical change. Reactants on the LHS, products on the RHS. Bonds.
Unit 4 Lecture 4 - Limiting Reactants
Stoichiometry.
Stoichiometry.
Ch Stoichiometry N2(g) + H2(g) NH3(g)
Reaction Stoichiometry.
Starter S moles NaC 2 H 3 O 2 are used in a reaction. How many grams is that?
Stoichiometry.
Chapter 9 – Review Stoichiometry
Percentage yield Perform calculations to determine the percentage yield of a reaction Atom Economy Perform calculations to determine the Atom Economy of.
Lecture 129/28/05 So what have you learned in the last few days?
Chemistry Chapter 10, 11, and 12 Jeopardy
BRN  Complete the table using the balanced chemical reaction: ______CH 4 + ______O 2  _____CO 2 + _____H 2 O  Complete the table using the balanced.
Quantities in Chemical Reactions Review Definitions $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Quantities Balanced Chemical Equations Additional Calculations Team 1Team.
Stoichiometry: Calculations with Chemical Formulas and Equations
Chapter 3 - Stoichiometry It is important to be able to quantify the amount of reagent(s) that will be needed to produce a given amount of product(s).
Reaction Stoichiometry
Stoichiopardy Holy Moley Do the 2 or 3 step Random Limit my Percent Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Chempardy.
Stoichiometry Jeopardy Percen t Yield Limiting Reactan ts “Stoiche d” About Chemist ry Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $ Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400.
Modern Chemistry Chapter 9 Stoichiometry
Chapter 4 Chemical Quantities and Aqueous Reactions.
Stoichiometry NC Essential Standard 2.2.4
Chapter 3 Stoichiometry. Atomic Mass Carbon-12 is assigned a mass of exactly atomic mass units (amu) Masses of other elements are compared to Carbon-12.
Stoichiometry Chapters 7 and 9.
Chapter 12 Review “Stoichiometry”
Test Review Chemical Reactions and Stoichiometry.
Solution types of stoichiometry problems are no harder than any other stoichiometry problem. You must use the concentration given (molarity) to convert.
Starter S moles of Iron (III) Hydroxide are used in a reaction. How many grams is that?
1 Chapter 8 Quantities in Chemical Reactions Tro, 2 nd ed.
Start-Up What is the molar mass for Calcium hydroxide? A g/mol B g/mol C g/mol D. 27 g/mol.
Chapter 10. Calculate the molar mass of the following compounds: a)NaOH - 40g/mol b)AuCl 3 – g/mol c)(NH 4 ) 2 SO 4 – g/mol Q1.
3.6 Solubility Solution: homogeneous mixture or mixture in which components are uniformly intermingled Solution: homogeneous mixture or mixture in which.
Day SOLVE: 1.5e24 molecules of SO 2 = ____ grams of SO 2 ? S 2 + 2O 2  2SO 2 And how many moles of S 2 ?
Stoichiometry! The heart of chemistry. The Mole The mole is the SI unit chemists use to represent an amount of substance. 1 mole of any substance = 6.02.
Chapter 4 Chemical Quantities and Aqueous Reactions.
8.1 Reacts with 3 mol of O2 Produces 1 mol of Al2O3
Chemistry Chapter 12 Review Game. Balancing Chemical Equations Stoich #1 (easy) Stoich #2 (more difficult) % Yield 1 point 1 point 1 point 1 point 1 point.
Stoichiometry Interpreting Balanced Equations
CHAPTER 9 Design: Winter Colors: Elemental STOICHIOMETRY.
Stoichiometry Warmup I have 1 mole of CO 2 gas at STP. How many grams of CO 2 do I have? How many Liters of CO 2 do I have? How many molecules of CO 2.
Chapter 12: Stoichiometry
STOICHIOMETRY PRACTICE. BELLWORK #3 3/2/2011 Define the following terms: a) limiting reactant b) excess reactants c) Percent yield d) Theoretical yield.
Stoichiometry. What is stoichiometry? Involves the mass relationships between reactants and products in a chemical reaction ▫Based on the law of conservation.
Problem 3.14 How many moles of cobalt (Co) atoms are there in 6.00 X109 (6 billion) Co atoms?
Stoichiometry. Stoichiometry- mass and quantity relationships among reactants and products in a chemical reaction Chemists use balanced chemical equations.
TOPIC 17: INTRO TO STOICHIOMETRY EQ: EQ: How does a balanced chemical equation help you predict the number of moles and masses of reactants and products?
Mass-Mass Conversions 56.0 g N 2 x g N 2 g NH = 1904 = When nitrogen and hydrogen react, they form ammonia gas, which has the formula.
Reaction Stoichiometry the numerical relationships between chemical amounts in a reaction is called stoichiometry the coefficients in a balanced chemical.
THIS IS With Host... Your VocabularyMole to mole Limiting Reactants Mass to mass Mass to Mole Percent Yield.
Stoichiometry Review 1.Write the equation for a reaction between Ca(OH) 2 and NaCl Unbalanced: Ca(OH) 2 + NaCl  CaCl 2 + NaOH Balanced: 1 Ca(OH)
Stoichiometry Pronounced: Stoy-kee-AHM-uh-tree. What is stoichiometry? Its math that helps us to see the relationship between what is used and formed.
Stoichiometry Introduction to Chemistry. Stoichiometry Example: 2H 2 + O 2 → 2H 2 O Equivalencies: 2 mol H 2 for every 1 mol O 2 2 mol H 2 for every 2.
Let’s talk… mole to mole
Stoichiometry Miss Knick HAHS Chem 1B.
Chapter 12 Review.
Chapter 12 Review.
Stoichiometry Review.
Unit 4: Chemical Equations and Stoichiometry
Chapter 12 Stoichiometry 12.2 Chemical Calculations
Unit 4: Chemical Equations and Stoichiometry
Presentation transcript:

What quantities are conserved in chemical reactions? grams and atoms

What quantities are not conserved in chemical reactions? liters and moles

When calculating percent yield, actual yield and theoretical yield are always ____________ of the same ____________. grams, product

How many moles of Ca(OH) 2 are needed to react completely with 2.35 moles of Al 2 (SO 4 ) 3 according to the following balanced chemical reaction? 7.05 moles Ca(OH) 2 Al 2 (SO 4 ) 3 + 3Ca(OH) 2  2Al(OH) 3 + 3CaSO 4

Using the following balanced equation, calculate the number of grams of water formed when 0.75 moles of B(OH) 3 are used in the reaction g H 2 O 3 H 2 SO B(OH) 3  B 2 (SO 4 ) 3 + 6H 2 O

How many moles of MgO form from the reaction below if enough reactants are used to form g of Fe? 0.43 mol MgO 3 Mg + Fe 2 O 3  2 Fe + 3 MgO

Using the following equation: Pb(SO 4 ) LiNO 3  Pb(NO 3 ) Li 2 SO 4 How many grams of lithium nitrate will be needed to make 250 grams of lithium sulfate, assuming that you have an adequate amount of lead (IV) sulfate to do the reaction? g LiNO 3

How many liters of NH 3 at STP form when g of ammonium carbonate, (NH 4 ) 2 CO 3, decompose according the following balanced equation? (NH 4 ) 2 CO 3  H 2 O + 2NH 3 + CO L NH 3

Calcium carbonate decomposes to form carbon dioxide and calcium oxide: CaCO 3 (s)  CO 2 (g) + CaO(s) How many grams of calcium carbonate will I need to form 3.45 liters of carbon dioxide at STP? g

Ethylene burns in oxygen to form carbon dioxide and water vapor: C 2 H 4 (g) + 3 O 2 (g)  2 CO 2 (g) + 2 H 2 O(g) How many liters of water vapor can be formed if 1.25 liters of ethylene are consumed in this reaction? Assume all substances are at the same temperature and pressure L H 2 O

Calculate the following: a) Which of the reagents is the limiting reagent? b) How many grams of each product are formed? c) How many grams of excess reactant remain? 3 NH 4 NO 3 + Na 3 PO 4  (NH 4 ) 3 PO NaNO 3 Assume we started with 30 grams of ammonium nitrate and 50 grams of sodium phosphate. a)ammonium nitrate b)18.6 grams of ammonium phosphate, 31.9 grams of sodium nitrate c)29.5 grams of sodium phosphate

If the percent yield of the following equation is 55%, how many grams of H 2 SO 4 are produced when 44.8 L of SO 3 are combined with excess water? Assume the reaction occurs at STP. SO 3 (g) + H 2 O(l) → H 2 SO 4 (aq) g H 2 SO 4

A 2.00 g sample of ammonia is mixed with 4.00 g of oxygen. Which is the limiting reactant and how many grams of excess reactant remains after the reaction has stopped? 4 NH 3 (g) + 5 O 2 (g)  4 NO(g) + 6 H 2 O(g) oxygen, 0.30 g NH 3

90.0 g of FeCl 3 reacts with 52.0 g of H 2 S, according to the following balanced equation: 2FeCl 3 + 3H 2 S  Fe 2 S 3 + 6HCl What is the limiting reactant? What is the mass of HCl produced? What mass of excess reactant remains after the reaction? FeCl 3, 60.8 g HCl, 23.6 g H 2 S

If 12.0 mL of 1.34 M NaOH is required to neutralize mL of a sulfuric acid, H 2 SO 4, solution, what is the molarity of the sulfuric acid? The balanced titration reaction is H 2 SO 4 (aq) + 2NaOH(aq)  Na 2 SO 4 (aq) + 2HOH(l) M H 2 SO 4

What volume (in mL) of M HCl is required to neutralize 100 mL of 0.01 M Ca(OH) 2 solution? The balanced titration reaction is 2HCl + Ca(OH) 2  2H 2 O + CaCl mL HCl